UN climate panel to put human behaviour under microscope

President Donald Trump points as he walks from Marine One across the South Lawn to the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2017, as he returns from Springfield, Mo. Photo by the Associated Press/Carolyn Kaster

As Hurricane Irma ripped into Florida on the weekend, bringing with it raging winds and water that stormed Miami's core, the world's leading climate change organization wrapped up several days of meetings in Montreal with a pledge to put consumer behaviour under the microscope.

The chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Hoesung Lee, said this was among a range of issues to be examined as the organization seeks to offer governments new policy options to avoid ecological disasters. He also noted the relevance of Hurricanes Irma and Harvey in his opening comments to media Sunday night, while summarizing the organization's agenda for the next two years.

At the top of the United Nation panel's to-do list is drilling down into regional impacts of and adaptation to climate change, as well as answering the demands of governments who want more information about how climate change and extreme weather events will affect their regions.

Lee noted that the IPCC would also be looking at the latest evidence regarding how human behaviour and consumption is affecting climate change. This is something that the United Nations panel has never done since it was first created in 1988, he said.

"It’s the first time ever that (the) IPCC (has) addressed the demand side of this whole problem," Lee said. "Demand side here means consumer demand, consumption behaviour, behavioural change — (the) human side aspect of climate change problems. In that regard, scientific disciplines addressing the human nature, human dimensions of this problem will be invited to assess the literature in this area.

"So we think that improving the understanding about what motivates people, what motivates changes in behaviour is a very important factor that policy makers may utilize for their development of policies."

A man walks along the beach in Hollywood, Fla. on Saturday, Sept. 9, 2017, as communities in Florida braced for Hurricane Irma. Climate scientists and governments want to know more about extreme weather events. File photo by The Canadian Press

Scientists say that human consumption of fossil fuels such as gasoline and coal for energy releases heat-trapping carbon emissions into the air that contribute to climate change and a wide-range of impacts that could include extreme weather events.

But scientists also chose their words carefully in linking the previous week's disastrous hurricanes to climate change.

"The problem is that one can never say this particular event would or would not have happened in the absence of climate change," said Gregory Flato, a Canadian government scientist who leads one of three IPCC working groups. "For example, hurricanes have been a feature of the earth's system for a very long time. And they will continue to be a feature of the earth's system. So one can't say that any particular hurricane was the result of changing climate. What we can talk about is the changing risks of hurricanes, and the changing characteristics of those hurricanes."

The first working group of the IPCC looks at the latest scientific evidence on the causes of climate change, while the second group examines impacts, adaptation and vulnerability, while the third working group examines scientific evidence about how to mitigate climate change.

Flato, who works at Environment and Climate Change Canada, leads the first IPCC group that focuses on the physical science basis of climate change.

"So as the climate warms, the atmosphere is able to hold more moisture, one anticipates that the rainfall associated with these large storms will be greater, there's also an expectation that as the sea surface temperatures increase, that the intensity of very intense hurricanes will become larger," Flato said. "So one can say something about the features of hurricanes and... other extreme events, and potentially about how their statistics might change and how the risk of those might change, but one can never say anything about an individual event (being) attributed exclusively to climate change or not."

What difference half a degree makes

The IPCC left Montreal with an outline for its sixth assessment report, which will deal explicitly with what happens if the earth's temperature rises 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Hans-Otto Pörtner, who leads the IPCC's second working group, noted the target — 1.5 degrees — and the focal point of future study "does not come out of the sky," but builds on existing knowledge and conversations between policy makers and scientists in 2015.

"It's very clear that there's an increase in risk as we move from 1.5 to 2," degrees above pre-industrial levels, Pörtner said. "We would stay in a safer world if we managed to keep climate change at the 1.5 degree target."

"The IPCC is clear about the fact that 2 degrees is a barrier we shouldn't pass. It needs to be as close as possible to 1.5. And I think this is part of the new reality that the work of the IPCC is more relevant and important than ever in order to raise awareness among decision-makers because the decisions are based on science."

Bonin told National Observer that, with Hurricane Irma being broadcast across television news stations, countries are taking climate change very seriously.

"Countries are interested (in having) as much information as possible," Bonin said.

Bonin added the IPCC is responding to countries' demands for more information and policy options — but the organization needs more money.

Trump called climate change a hoax

The IPCC was created in 1988 by the United Nations and the World Meteorological Organization "to provide policymakers with regular assessments of the scientific basis of climate change, its impacts and future risks, and options for adaptation and mitigation."

Its role is not to make policy, but to collect and synthesize the information that governments need to make policy. It also relies on its 195 member countries for funding.

Under President Donald Trump, the United States administration is expected to stop funding the international climate science organization, making for a loss of about $2-million.

"The funding from the United States is a matter for the United States government to announce," IPCC spokesman Jonathan Lynn said Sunday. "We haven't been formally notified.

In the past, Trump has described climate change as a hoax perpetrated by China to steal American manufacturing jobs. His administration has also proposed budget cuts that would shift U.S. government resources away from research and monitoring needed to adequately track and mitigate climate change.

President Donald Trump reacts before speaking at a rally at the Phoenix Convention Center, in Phoenix, Ariz., on Tuesday, August 22, 2017. Photo by The Associated Press/Alex Brandon

Lynn emphasized countries decide for themselves when and if they will support the IPCC.

"Money comes in as (a) voluntary contribution, we don't know when it's going to come. We invite all our member governments to contribute to the IPCC and we will be grateful for any contributions that we get from any of them."

On the weekend Canada committed to doubling its support for the IPCC, upping its annual contribution of $150,000 to $300,000 through 2022. IPCC members applauded the announcement, which makes for guaranteed funding through a full cycle of its research.

"If all other countries are doing the same then their work will be way easier, and they won't have to worry about (the) budget, which is incredible that they still have to do," Bonin said.

McKenna urged countries to work together

Before the conference, Canadian Environment and Climate Change Minister told National Observer that she was hopeful that every country would participate in sharing their scientific expertise.

"When it comes to good science we all need to be working together," McKenna said in Gatineau, Que.

McKenna made those comments on Aug. 31, after speaking to an elementary school classroom about climate change and launching a new federal website to encourage children to discuss the issue.

"The United States have been doing very good work on the science behind climate change as are other countries and so we’re really hopeful that every country will understand the importance of working together."

McKenna said in a statement on Saturday that Canada's additional support would help climate scientists around the world "assess vital research, and give governments the tools to make smart, evidence, based decisions for our future."

McKenna is guiding the students through the "Brain Buster" questionnaire, while student Navy Slocombe looks on. Photo by Alex Tétreault

As Miami blasted by hurricane, IPCC wants more studies of cities

IPCC delegates will return to Canada in March, 2018, for a city-oriented conference in Edmonton, Alta.

As many as 700 researchers, scientists, policy-makers, city planners, and others will meet in Canada's oil country in the new year to more specifically address gaps in shared knowledge on cities, climate change, and how the urban centres that account for between 70 and 80 per cent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions will adapt for the future.

Diana Ürge-Vorsatz, who will co-chair the Edmonton conference, said the scientific community has more evidence to gather on cities, and cities have a lot to learn from each other.

Ürge-Vorsatz is a professor at Central European University and director of the Center for Climate Change and Sustainable Energy Policy.

"Certainly extreme weather impacts each city, whatever region, equally. When we have an extremely intense hurricane, it virtually doesn't really matter if you're in a very rich country or a very poor country," she told National Observer. "Nevertheless, in general we can state that the vulnerability of the cities in the Global South, or generally in poorer countries or poorer cities, is much higher, to the same risk."

Diana Ürge-Vorsatz is co-chairwoman of a conference on cities and climate change taking place in Edmonton, Alta. in March, 2018. She was in Montreal on Sept. 7, 2017 for IPCC meetings. Photo by Trish Audette-Longo

So, she said, the question then turns to how cities adapt to climate challenges, how they mitigate risks.

"It's not enough just to look at the acutal physical impacts of climate change, which is clear -- extreme weather events, floods, fires, storms ... droughts," Ürge-Vorsatz said. "But also, what infrastructure is available to different cities?"

The opportunity to learn is not one-way, she added, but multi-directional.

The aim of the Edmonton conference will be to treat cities as systems, to take stock of knowledge already in place (including academic research and research carried out by cities and NGOs), understand what's missing, and then set a new research agenda for the IPCC's seventh assessment cycle.

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